In simple terms, RERSI plots lines on the price chart that reflect levels of the RSI . E.g. if you set up a RERSI line at a level of 50, then price will touch that line when the standard RSI indicator reads 50. Hopefully that makes sense, but compare the two if it doesn't.

Why is the RERSI useful if it's just plotting RSI values? Well, it simplifies things, and enables you to get a clearer picture of trend direction, RSIsupport and resistance levels, RSI trading signals, and it keeps your chart window uncluttered.

I've set up 5 RERSI lines to be plotted: Overbought and Oversold Levels, a Middle Level (generally leave this at 50), and then Down/Up Trend Lines . The latter two are loosely based on the work of Constance Brown (and they in turn were influenced by Andrew Brown), who posited that RSI doesn't breach certain levels during trends (e.g. 40-50 is often a support level during an uptrend).

Play around with the levels, and the RSI Length, to see how your particular market reacts, and where key levels may lie. Remember, this isn't meant as a stand-alone system (although I think there's potential to use it as such, especially with price action trading - which I guess wouldn't make it stand-alone then!!), and works best with confirmation from other sources.

Oh, and there's MTF capability, because I think that's useful for all indicators.

Any queries, please let me know.

Cheers,
RJR

Catatan Rilis:
v 1.1
- Update so script works with crypto markets (huge thanks to @NeoButane for pointing this out and providing the fix!)

Catatan Rilis:
Update to add a Zero Lag Moving Average to smooth the lines. This should make the signals much clearer.

Here's a couple of ways that you can stack different methods of support/resistance to develop stronger levels to trade (these are Monthly/Yearly Camarilla Pivots). Everything is easier in hindsight, but that's how we learn... Train yourself on setups that have worked, and look at how they would have developed in real-time. Then start applying those to the markets.